pigpenracing
En-Route
We may go look at a 1963 Cessna 210. Very low airframe and engine hours and just a very clean airplane. I know the 210 had gear issues and some other problems through the years. Are there any major issues with the 1963 210C?
We may go look at a 1963 Cessna 210. Very low airframe and engine hours and just a very clean airplane. I know the 210 had gear issues and some other problems through the years. Are there any major issues with the 1963 210C?
We may go look at a 1963 Cessna 210. Very low airframe and engine hours and just a very clean airplane. I know the 210 had gear issues and some other problems through the years. Are there any major issues with the 1963 210C?
I think the old 210s have gear saddle issues that can get really spendy. I'm not positive of that though.
Edit, I found this from CPA:
1960 through 1969 210s have flat spring steel landing gear legs held in "saddles". Service history indicates that these saddles can crack over time, creating the possibility of a landing gear failure. The FAA issued AD XX-XX-XX which requires annual dye-penetrant inspection of these saddles after a certain number of hours. The Cessna Pilots Association reccomends the saddles be checked every 100 hours or at annual inspection no matter how many hours are on them.
Saw this flyer at kgle yesterday
I think the old 210s have gear saddle issues that can get really spendy. I'm not positive of that though.
Edit, I found this from CPA:
1960 through 1969 210s have flat spring steel landing gear legs held in "saddles". Service history indicates that these saddles can crack over time, creating the possibility of a landing gear failure. The FAA issued AD XX-XX-XX which requires annual dye-penetrant inspection of these saddles after a certain number of hours. The Cessna Pilots Association reccomends the saddles be checked every 100 hours or at annual inspection no matter how many hours are on them.
'61 210A got the third side window with the original 180/185-style fuselage; '62 210B got a new 4" wider fuselage and all-around cabin windows. The '64 210D (christened "Centurion") got wider-span electric flaps, along with a bigger engine (285 hp IO-520), and optional child seats built into the top of the main gear wells.That older model is basically a 182RG. They got redesigned in 63 I think and got the 3rd window.
Saw this flyer at kgle yesterday
Is there such a thing as a 50 year old complex aircraft that doesn't have issues that are expensive to fix?
I thought all 210s were retracts and strutless???
1960 Model 210 (hideous paint job standard at no extra cost):I thought all 210s were retracts and strutless???
The 205 (also known as "Model 210-5") was introduced in 1963 as a fixed-gear derivative of the wide-body retractable Model 210B from the previous year. A fixed-gear variant allowed Cessna to increase gross weight, get rid of the main gear wells and lower the rear cabin floor to allow room for six seats, while using the same 260-hp engine and basic airframe. Also, the baggage door on the left rear was enlarged. The 205 was built only for the 1963 and 1964 model years.The 1963 through ~ 1966 are basically a Cessna 205 (started in 63) with retractable gear.
The '67 210G/T210G was the first strutless model.
Years ago I flew a P206 Super Skylane to deliver a load of donated Christmas gifts to Mexico. Lots of room; would have been very comfortable for 4 or 5 plus beaucoup bags. Disadvantage to the U206 (Super Skywagon, Stationair) is that it does not have a right-front passenger door.205 is pretty sweet. Two big doors up front and one you can get kids through in the back. I've had 5 adults and one middle schooler in one with 80 gallons of fuel. It was a short ride but it did fine. IO470 is a little easier on the wallet than the 520 gas bill.
Dangit, I thought I could talk you into a Meyers I could borrow ....
I think they are cool. I spoke to a guy that owns one and he talked me out of it. Back seat is tiny and when you add fuel you can only haul 2 people. I am still researching and not set on anything yet. I have a guy wanting to trade a Bonanza, Super Viking and 2 C210 guys want to trade. I had a call today from a real serious buyer and he may leave a deposit tomorrow????
It will be a
Bonanza
Super Viking
182 or 210?
I like your 180 but my partner is not a tailwheel guy and does not fly enough to stay on top of it. The best thing for him would be a fixed gear 182.